Some of the couples I work with have been having sex that is more of an intellectual exercise than an emotional connection. There is a lot of strategizing, observing, fantasizing, worrying, critiquing, hoping… but not a lot of genuine expressing. I invite them to experiment with sexual play that consciously uses emotion to guide their sexual action, sharing with their partner how they feel in that moment.

In expressive sex, the focus is on using touch and body movements to communicate what you are feeling. The point of this is not actually that your partner reads you correctly, but that you feel more connected to your own experience. It actively makes sex a non-verbal way to connect and show a side of yourself. Approaching sex from this new perspective opens up a lot of potential and can allow a broader range of sexual moods and therefore, creative ways of interacting. Things get less boring and much more dynamic.

Most of us can easily imagine sex expressing love, lust, joy, curiosity, contentment. And yet, many of us hide even these feelings in sex. Maybe we are trying to play it cool or maybe allowing emotions to come through feels vulnerable. And maybe we have been taught that sex is a series of moves, like some vastly improved adult version of Twister, and we are too busy thinking about where to put our hand next, that we forget that we are emotional. But what a powerful medium sex provides to convey just how good you fucking feel! Sex can contain your overwhelm and turn it into ecstasy.

Try this : How might you touch your partner to express how drawn to them you are? Start at their face, use your fingertips as messengers to represent how attractive they are to you. Then bring your lips to their neck and shoulders; whisper secrets about how much you lust after them. Feeling love? Ask your partner to lay back and touch them all over, imagining that your hands are telling the story of all that you have shared together and how much they mean to you.

Positive emotional states are often the places that couples start with when they begin to explore sex as a vehicle for expressing emotion. But you may have also enjoyed sexual impulses that stemmed from pride, power, vulnerability, need, fear, even anger. Are those ok for you to express with your partner? Why or why not? And how about more subtle emotional states, like doubt, loneliness, apathy, regret, irritation? Can you imagine touching sexually in a way that expressed and contained sadness?

Does imagining some of these emotions being included in sex make you uncomfortable? Ask yourself honestly; what range of emotions you have felt with partners? Were there times that you wish you had recognized some emotions as a cue to stop? Many of us have had that experience. Are there some emotions that you would feel ok expressing but would not want a partner to be feeling when they are with you? Why do you think that is?

Thinking and talking about what emotions are welcome in sex for you can be a great practice. It introduces questions about your motivations to have sex and how you want your partners to feel about you when they engage with you sexually. If you want to go there, it can also open up conversations about old wounds and fears and clarify boundaries. Being up front about emotions and choosing to bring them into sex as a way to increase the intensity can also make it easier to manage emotions outside of sex.

Try this : Start with a difficult emotion that is not directed at or inspired by your partner today – For example, frustration from a run-of-the-mill stressful day. Tell your partner you are feeling #)*@! about the day, not them, and you are going to let some of that steam out during sex play. Then see what it is like to hide your face in your partner’s body and growl. Bite gently. Be more forceful, a bit more selfish. Keep connected to your partner; take breaks to ask, “Is this ok?” Breathe deeply and let it all out in a battle cry. Maybe you can ask them to put pressure on your arms or torso so that you can push back or struggle.

Drawing on our more challenging emotions is best done when we feel safe and trusting. It requires that we have emotional reserves and a strong foundation in self-regulation skills. Having in depth conversations about triggering words, moods, or memories is necessary to avoid unintentional pain. People who are informed in the BDSM community may talk about psychological edge play, when someone consciously chooses to set up their sex play in a way that pushes into their emotional edges. This play can be incredibly healing as participants find a way to feel self-efficacy and choice in previously scary scenarios. It is also, by design, risky. I believe that getting support and working on personal insight is key, so consider finding a sex therapist who is kink friendly and understands sexual health and diversity.

To be clear, sometimes it is a relief to separate from emotions and have sex that is clear and transcendent. Sex can provide a spiritual place, like meditation, or a pure physical release, like exercise when you are in the flow. And for many of us, we just want sex to be relaxing, thank you very much. That is totally okay.

But sexuality can also be a potent place to explore our emotions and our ability to share them with others. Expressive sex explicitly opens up creative touch, allows us to be emotional selves, to have moods and variations, to let the energy of feelings blend with the energy of sensations to create something possible new and unique each time you come together.

I was once at a late summer party in San Francisco in a group of people very much identified with sex-positivity. A man I didn’t know began talking to me and he looked around the room and said, “You know, I have slept with all but 3 of the women here.” Since I was included in that three, I can speculate where the conversation might have gone next. But since he didn’t know he was talking to a sex therapist, he seemed surprised by my response. I turned to look at him and I genuinely asked, “Wow. What did you learn about yourself from all that sex?” I didn’t mean to fluster or embarrass him; I was asking openly. But he became very uncomfortable, laughed it off with, “I learned I like sex” and immediately walked away. But I wish he had at least tried to engage with the question. Because I really did want to know.

The thing is I think a lot of us, no matter how sex positive or not, are not asking our self that question – what has sex taught me about ME? And so, are not allowing sex to work its real magic on us.

Sexuality is not simply a check-list of things we can do. It is not simply a way to prove ourselves viable as an object of desire. It is not to find what category you belong in or who you belong with. It is not just to prove that we can please someone else or that we can have multiple orgasms or that we can commit to one person or commit to four people or that we can be brave or express resistance to old cultural conditioning. It can be all these things at different times. But it can also be an incredible path to self-awareness.

Does that sound too heavy to you? It really doesn’t have to be.

What I am suggesting is that we bring our own sexuality into its rightful place on our list of “things that give us information about our Self”. It should also be on the lists : “things that will change through the course of my life with or without my permission, “things that are different in real life than in entertainment” and “things that might, when I least expect it, confuse the crap out of me”. You have those lists, right?

But really, it is ok - good even - to take a moment after sex to ask yourself, “How was that for me? What did I feel, discover, want more of? What did I find in myself that I may not have found before?” It is not so much that our partners are our teachers, although they may be, but that HOW WE RESPOND to different people, different moods, different environments, that can teach us.

Expanding our awareness through sex is an inside job. External variables are catalysts, but the combustion happens within you, in the way you open yourself up to something, or don’t. And this exploration creates the power within you to bring your own passion and pleasure to the party. It can even give you insight in to spiritual questions, inter-connectedness, personal needs and archetypes, nature, flow states, and so much more. Let sex feed you, inform you, inspire you. And then maybe, some summer, we can have some stimulating party talk.

Think of your voice and your breath as fun sex toys that you always have with you, cost nothing, and don’t require a trip, virtual or otherwise, to the sex store. Simple ways of making sound and directing your breath can quickly get you and your partner into another level of intensity. You just need to be brave enough to bring it out.

Ready to try?

Start with slow, deep breaths – Breathing is a cue to the body about how to channel energy. Slow deep breaths tell our bodies to relax, to open up to sensation, and for most of us a good deep breath is long overdue and just feels good. Bring in breath so that your lower belly fills up, then as you let it out imagine that your tension is melting. Deep breaths are great when your partner is focused on pleasing you and you get to lay back and receive (and can help relieve any shyness you may feel about being pleasured).

Move with your breath– Now that you are breathing deeply, you can rock your pelvis along with your breath. You may tilt your pelvis back on the in breath and tuck it forward on your out breath. These can be small gentle movements; think rocking, not thrusting at this point. There is no right or wrong with this, see what feels right for you. Just use your breath as an invitation to move your body. Let your breath deepen so that you can hear it. Don’t be surprised if your breathing starts to get faster…

Faster and deeper – As you get more turned on, your breath will change. You can help with that by consciously speeding up your breathing. Try taking in mini-gulps of air, like gasps. As you do that imagine your sensation building.

Let sound come out – If you are breathing deeply, you may naturally be making some luscious noise. Just let your mouth open, relax your jaw, and let your breath come out fully as a sigh. If that feels good, turn it into a moan. Making sound engages your whole body and keeps energy flowing, which is good for intensity. Making sound cues your partner to your pleasure and that is a huge turn on. But it is not just for your partner - I really recommend that you make sound when you masturbate too, so that you can ride your own excitement and get used to hearing yourself.

Sound = Vibration - Sound involves little vibrations. If you have ever chanted OM in yoga class, you may have experienced the resonation of sound into your belly. Using your mouth and sound creates a nice little vibration for sensitive spots. If you have your mouth on your partner for some oral play, make a little ‘MMM’ sound. Gently holding a nipple in your mouth and humming – oh yeah.

Feeling the breath - You can use your breath to create coolness or warmth on your partner’s skin. Lick a place and then blow gently on it from an inch away and watch the goosebumps rise. Lick a place and bring your open mouth close to the skin and breath out, wet, warmth. Blow like a light tickle, whisper secrets into their skin. Sensation play, no props needed.

Say it – Say “yes”, say “please’, say “oh god, don’t stop!”. Tell your partner what you are about to do. Tell your partner what you would like them to do. Using your voice can be a huge part of the fun – even the whole part if you are engaging in phone sex or just opting for a safe sex choice. This can be part of the sex play hours before you get naked together. And it can be especially fun in building anticipation with a partner who is happily restrained or blindfolded. Talking dirty is its own sexplay toolkit, and I will write more specifically about that next time…

For now, try these simple intensity boosts. If making sound feels embarrassing to you, I highly recommend you start with using breath as a gentle introduction. Play music so that you feel surrounded by sound. You can also try muffling your sounds by moaning into a pillow or an open palm over your mouth. Restricting your sound, is its own kind of play. But in any case, breath is powerful. When in doubt, take a deep breath,… let it out slowly. Enjoy.

When people think of “having sex” they tend to focus on the
hot and heavy, rubbing bodies against one another part of it. But really, there
are many aspects of a sexual encounter, most of them overlooked and
underappreciated. Sex does not being when we are naked with someone we like. In
real life we don’t fast forward to the climax, nor should we. We miss out on a
lot if we think this way. We need to rethink the sexual encounter, giving it a
new starting point and a new finish that can really encompass the greater
possibility and the role we play in it.

Phase One – Creating Space
to be sexual. Yes, in real life we have to actually make choice to include
sex in our daily life. So this phase includes the necessity of actually carving
out time in a schedule. Certainly easier to do in that 6 hour break between
classes when you were in college, but don’t be discouraged. I have said it
before and I will say it again, scheduling sex can be very hot, if you engage
your mind in anticipation and enthusiasm. Because creating space to be sexual
is about more than timing. It also means making space in your mind for
sexuality and sensuality, thinking about what you desire and listening to the
voice of your sensate body as it finds things to pleasure in. It includes day
dreaming about a partner or partners, grooming yourself with the intention to
seduce, and possibly preparing for a sexy experience by purchasing a toy or
even putting clean sheets on the bed. There are lots of ways to create space.
What is important is to honor that you have a part to play in this, sex doesn’t
just happen.

Phase Two – Becoming
an Embodied Self Again. Maybe some of you enlightened folks go around all
day long, aware of your body and mindful of each fluctuating sensation. But
most of us, have to consciously bring our attention to our body. We have to let
the rest of the day go, so that we can be present to pleasure. Finding ways to
refocus and stop thinking about the rude thing your boss did or the thing you forgot
when you went to the store today and have to remember tomorrow, is key. If you
skip this step, you are may feel a nagging disappointment, like you are missing
something, because you are – the actual experience of sex. Getting into your
body, into a body-mind that is awake to the senses and the intuitive movement
that is yours, is an important part of a sexual encounter.

Phase Three –
Engaging with Another. Sex with a partner requires that we enter into a
dance, both leading and following. We must listen to the cues of another body
as well as our own. We may choose to open ourselves up in ways that are
vulnerable or risky. This is a distinctly different way of being than the way
we spend most of our day. Some people find they need some time to verbally
connect and some need to use silence to shift gears from the conversations of
shared responsibilities and chores. Engaging with the other person starts with
initation of sex, which could have started days before with some smoking texts
or a whisper close to ones ear. It is an act of seduction, a drawing the other person
in as you allow yourself to be drawn in, a willingness to enter a trance of one
another, your attention right here with them, now.

Phase Four – Riding
the Waves. Ok, this is the part that most people think of when they think
of having sex. This is the part when the mind can go still while the body gets
very, very busy. And this is the part of efforting too, of pushing and
clutching and reaching new heights of sensation. Here is where we may feel out
of control or overwhelmed or exhilarated. We may feel deep emotions or a welcome
emptiness, cleared out, simply sensation. This may include orgasm or orgasms or
not. But mostly this phase includes being able to feel and respond, not planning
ahead but being willing to ride the waves as they come, and allowing yourself
to be moved.

Phase Five –
Returning. And then things settle down, we return to our minds, our rooms,
our awareness of the rest of the world. But for a period of time there is a
need to transition. For some this involves a heavy sleepiness, a rest after
intensity. For some, a desire to keep the body contact and to allow emotional
ripples to play out gently. For some it may be processing what just happened, building
connection through sharing with words and questions and possibly insights. For
some a withdrawal into self, to reaffirm the boundaries of our being. But we
all take some time to return, to close that particular sexual encounter in some
way. This phase is just as important as the others and can be just as rich and
satisfying.

I invite you to honor all of these phases and to take
responsibility for them. Your sexual encounters are vaster than you have been
led to believe from the way we talk about “sex”. Redefine your start to finish
and you will find there is so much more to explore.

You may have heard it before from a sex therapist like
myself – “Don’t be so orgasm focused.” Easy to say, not so easy to do. And why,
you ask, are we so down on the orgasm?

Trust me, we are not anti-orgasm. Orgasms are great!
And a big motivating factor in being sexual. And they are good for us, although
I won’t go into that research here. I like them; you like them. Good for us.

The problem with focusing on the orgasm is it really limits
our sexual expression. Humans are very good at learning patterns. We quickly
develop short cuts and automatic responses to simplify reaching our goals. In
many areas of life this serves us well. So many of us, by the time we reach
thirty or so, have learned very effective ways to reach orgasm, using a
specific speed, rhythm, position, etc. If we are in long term relationships,
our partner or partners may have learned the steps to our easiest orgasm. In
fact, we can run through these patterns again and again, effectively teaching
our body to find orgasm this way with this specific type of stimulation.
Efficient, sure…

But do you want to be having efficient sex? Maybe sometimes,
when you are in labor and trying to quickly have an orgasm to stimulate your
uterus or you are giving a sperm sample or something. The option of mutual
orgasm quickies is nice. But having sex strictly to get to orgasm efficiently
can start to feel a lot like masturbating with a partner. I hear many couples
complain of the ever increasing limitations to what they do during sex, because
it doesn’t led to quick orgasm, until they are performing the same 10 minute
routine each time, orgasming and being done. But they don’t feel passionate,
inspired, or connected which is also a pretty great part of sex.

That is the thing we sex therapists are trying to get
across.Finding your way to orgasm is
one small part of sex. But there is a lot more to experience. Risk and
creativity are key to our ongoing arousal and excitement; we thrive on it. Passionate
connection with a partner requires much more than knowing their orgasm routine.
Your body has many channels for pleasure, and many new sensations to explore.
Did you know that after losing sensation in their genitals people have been
found to orgasm from earlobe stimulation? Routes to intense pleasure and
release are only as limited as we decide they will be.

So get creative. Focus on pleasures of many kinds,
regardless of whether you think you will orgasm in the next 20 minutes or not.
Focus on your partner and relaxing into sensual research and reconnaissance.
You may actually find that by ignoring the easy path to orgasm, you forge new
trails to intense gratification. And hey, you can still always take the short
cut. Just don’t make it the only path you seek.

It is rumored that Picasso, arguably one of the most
innovative artists of his time, said after seeing ancient cave paintings in
France, “We have invented nothing new.” Now, he was musing on his field,
artistic expression. But I wonder if the same thing cannot be said for my
field, human sexuality.

Clearly we love the headlines that blare, “THIS HAS NEVER
HAPPENED LIKE THIS BEFORE.” We behave as though we have just discovered BDSM
because a popular book features it, that sex toys are a new obsession, that gender-bending
is modern. We get worked up and fear-based around the availability of porn and
the “new” trend of open relationships. Um, sorry but this is not new. None of
this is really as new and innovative as we seem to like to think.

People have been gay, bi, transgender, into being dominated,
into looking at images of other people having sex, and by a majority, into
multiple sex partners in a lifetime, since humans have been around. Does this
disappoint you? I know we get turned on by the new, by a sense that we are transgressing.
I don’t want to take the naughty away from you. But…Ah well. Your ancestors
shared your interests and desires.

Don’t worry, you can still keep your sex cutting edge. How
do you make it feel new? By doing whatever you are doing completely in the
present moment. Sure you may have been tied to the bedposts 20 times before,
but this time is different. It is different because you are different in this
moment. But you have to pay attention, real mindful attention. Don’t picture your
Victorian great, great grandpa getting pegged (or maybe do, if that is part of
the thrill), it doesn’t matter who has done this before, this time is yours.
Each shiver, each throb, each time you catch you partner’s eye, is new to you.
It only feels old if you generalize and lose track of the here and now. Don’t
just go through the motions getting it done. This is not a check list kind of
scenario. Slow down and indulge the details, the unique little aspects that
will never happen quite like that ever again.

So enjoy getting nasty out there, if you like. Remember to
enjoy it for YOU not for the shock you think it would cause great aunt Matilda.
You never know what she got up to. It may not be new, but it can be new to you,
and that is enough – in fact, that can be fabulous.

This one is inspired by the classic horror film, The Bride of Frankenstein, and that epic scream face Elsa
Lancaster made famous. The story is a sad one. Poor Frankenstein monster was
lonely and the doctor created a bride for him. But once she was made and
brought to life, seeing Frankie stumble and mumble at her apparently didn’t
appeal. Cue, Scream. And classic horror movie destruction.

For us human folk, happily not in a horror movie, this
dynamic can play out in more subtle ways. Sometimes our seduction skills are
lacking or just in hiding. Like Frankie we attempt an awkward hand pat or
grunt, “want to do it?”. And like the Bride, we can respond in less than kind
ways. Rejection hurts, whether you are the only 2 monsters on the planet or
not, and like Frankie rejection can make us feel, “she hates me”. So what can
we learn from their sad tale?

It can be important to let our partner know that they may be
appealing but the lackluster seduction routine is not. Talk about how you like
sex to be initiated. I am not suggesting you expect flowers covering the bed or
a striptease each time you have sex, but there may be some things that help to
get your mind on sex and some things that hinder it. Be specific. Share with
your partner what words turn you on and which ones don’t. What types of touch
feel arousing? And, equally important, what types of touch turn you off? Do you
need a bit of conversation before you engage sexually or maybe you prefer your
partner to not be wearing the sweatshirt with baby spit up on it. Speak up,
focus on what you like, while being upfront and non-blaming about what you
don’t like so much.

And if you are just not in the mood, that is ok. But don’t’
scream or hiss in your partner’s general direction. Try saying something that
lets them know you do want to connect with them sometime soon, just not right
now. Really ask yourself, what would help me get in the mood? Could it be as
simple as, “I think I need an hour to soak in the tub and relax and then we can
connect”. Or maybe you know a night later this week will be better. Think of
trying to include an addendum to each No. Try for a “Not now, but maybe…?”

If we can learn from the bride and avoid being unfriendly
about it all and learn from Frankie and try just a little harder to be
seductive, it will help keep everyone happy and connected.

If you are like a lot of people, you want to know “What is
the one thing people most want in a lover?” So I will answer, based on the many hours I
have spent as a sex therapist talking to people about their wishes and desires,
and it may surprise you.

The most common thing I hear people wanting from a sex
partner, of any gender variation, age, commitment history…, is for their
partner to be enthusiastic and to want to be having sex with them. That’s
right, enthusiasm, happy willingness, passion. Seems simple enough. We want to
feel wanted. We want to share something with someone who is enjoying themselves.
I hear many sexual details and accoutrements that people want as well, more
anal, less anal, a spanking now and then, to keep the heels on …lots of
variations of things that would be nice to try. But the foundational piece for
most people is to feel that their partner is into it, into them, and happy to
spend time being sexual together.

Sadly, there are lots of ways our individual enthusiasm for
sex can wane. Dissatisfactions, arguments, frustrations, new body pains,
exhaustion, shame, self doubt, and on and on. And lack of enthusiasm will kill
passion in a relationship fast than anything else (unless you are with a bully and
that is no good). These externals can decrease enthusiasm, sure. But truly,
passion is an internal job.

You can find your passionate person inside at any point in
life. It involves listening to yourself, feeling your body sensations, giving
yourself time and space to relax and enjoy many aspects of life without rushing
on to the next thing. It involves being curious and communicating your
curiosity, ideas, fantasies, and discoveries, just to see where they might take
you. It involves tending to what is inside of you, which is where you will find
lots of important information, not least of which being - what excites you. Oh,
and also important…clear out any old stuff telling you that you have to play it
cool, that passion is disgraceful, that you should be ashamed to want. Clear it
out! Make room to be passionate.

Then show it. This is key. Don t assume your partner knows you
like that. Appreciate them by giving them some solid clues. You don’t have to
perform porn style, just be genuinely enthusiastic. What might happen, is you
turn yourself on even more. Enthusiasm feeds itself. Imagine with each touch
and kiss and thrust, saying with your body (or your words, that’s fun too), “Yes”.
That’s how your blow your lover’s mind. And your own.

Have you tried talking dirty to a partner? Think of your imagination and your voice as fun sex toys that you always have with you, cost nothing, and don’t require a trip, virtual or otherwise, to the sex store. You just need to be brave enough to bring it out. If you are a little nervous to try, here are some tips:

Take a breath – You know that squeaky, croaky voice thing that happens when you seem to run out of air while talking – not sexy. Start by taking a slow breath, there is no rush. You will feel calmer and, as a bonus, no pubescent voice cracking. Oh, and laughter is a great way to get yourself breathing.

Picture it in your mind – Your words will come more easily and be more juicy if you let yourself form images in your mind. As they used to say in writing class, “no turn on for the writer, no turn on for the reader”, Wait, that wasn’t quite what they said…Well, anyway, use your imagination to turn yourself on and it will be more fun all around.

Try different perspectives – Some of you will love telling a sexy tale from a first person perspective, what you want to do to a partner, what you imagine being done to you. But some of you will have more fun talking about imaginary other people, which can go anywhere from what the naughty neighbors are doing next door to what Marie Antoinette got up to. I suggest you try shifting it up and see what stokes your fantasy creation best.

Do it in the dark – Phone sex works for people for a lot of reasons, but a major one is removing the pressure of being seen. Just letting yourself be a voice in the dark, lets you both close your eyes and indulge in imagining. No one can see you blush and you can still touch, get in close and whisper so your breath brushes your partner’s ears or neck.

Have a safe word – Yes, even for talking sexy it is good to have safe boundaries. Each of our fantasy realms are different with borders that are in scary territory for some people. If you really want to get into talk as turn-on, it can help to establish some turn-offs first. Get a sense of what is off limits (possibilities might be talking about people you actually know, adult/child scenes, violence or humiliation, describing your partner’s body as different than it actually is or…). People’s limits are different when it comes to fantasy, but we still have our limits.

No pressure to do – Remember that just because you get hot thinking about it, that doesn’t mean you want to do it. Talk about this with your partner ahead of time so there is no misunderstanding. Fantasy is fantasy; part of the fun is to go out to the edges. Just promise to let them know what you DO want to actually do when that time comes. Maybe promise to tell them in exquisite detail…

This story makes me smile: Children’s book author Maurice Sendak received a card from one of his young fans. It was special to him and so Sendak took time creating a little drawing to send back to the boy with a note that said how much he loved the boy’s card. Soon after, Sendak got a note from the boy’s mom, saying “Jim loved your card so much he ate it”. It should be no surprise that as an author who celebrates the wildness in children, and all of us, Sendak has said this was the best compliment he ever received.

It’s not a coincidence that many of our descriptions of passion include allusions or metaphors of eating. The instinct to take something inside of us, to make it a part of us, to feed ourselves from it, all reflect feelings of deep excitement and passion. To take an experience in and leave nothing behind, to fully ingest it – how many of us forget how to do this as we get older? Especially now that we are constantly encouraged to document and share each experience, however mundane, and more and more people believe “if I didn’t post it, it didn’t really happen”. How might Jim’s experience of devouring joy been changed if his mother had required time to pose for a picture followed by a post where she could monitor likes? Even the very adult instinct to respectfully save the picture (because it could possibly have paid for Jim’s first car) would change the flow of pure expression of irrational joy. How does our instinct to hold on to something, to keep it safe and sound, change moments of passion?

What do you love so much you want to gobble it up? What bring you such joy that you don’t feel any need to share it with others? When do you break open moments of such excitement that the future doesn’t even occur to you and there is no need to hold anything back for later? What kind of love has come your way which made you feel like you took it into yourself and it became a part of you? What holds you back from devouring passion?

Experiment : With a partner play with touching them in a way that allows you to feel like you are taking them in through your hands and skin. Imagine that you can feed on them and they will never be depleted. Breathe them in. Taste them; no biting, unless they ask! Imagine for right now it is ok to be a wild thing devouring what it wants.

Melissa Fritchle is the author of The Conscious Sexual Self Workbook and a Holistic Psychotherapist, licensed in California as a Marriage and Family Therapist (Lic#48627). She has a private practice specializing in Sex Therapy and Couples Therapy. She travels far and wide, internationally and on the internet, to spread compassionate, sex positive, diverse, realistic sex education.